Thomas-
The port is different from http. If you have psql installed on you machine,
a simple test would be to type:
psql -h<hostname> <database name>
If you can connect and run a few quesries, then you know that the host
machine is accepting connections.
-Nick
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pgsql-jdbc-owner@postgresql.org
> [mailto:pgsql-jdbc-owner@postgresql.org]On Behalf Of tsmets@brutele.be
> Sent: Tuesday, March 05, 2002 1:43 PM
> To: Tom Lane; pgsql jdbc
> Subject: Re: [JDBC] Problem to connect from host via JDBC ...
>
>
>
>
> AFAIK
> there's no such network policy as I was able to connect to the machine via
> HTTP when apache was turned on
>
> Thomas,
>
>
> --
> Thomas SMETS
> rue J. Wytsmanstraat 62
> 1050 Bruxelles
> yahoo-id : smetsthomas
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tom Lane" <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
> To: <tsmets@brutele.be>
> Cc: "pgsql jdbc" <pgsql-jdbc@postgresql.org>
> Sent: 05 March, 2002 5:00 PM
> Subject: Re: [JDBC] Problem to connect from host via JDBC ...
>
>
> > <tsmets@brutele.be> writes:
> > > Trying to connect from another machine via JDBC gives the following
> error :
> > > "1109 [main] WARN org.test.JDBCPostgres.TestJDBCPostgres - Message :
> > > Connection refused.
> >
> > "Connection refused" suggests that the server machine's kernel is
> > rejecting the connection before it ever gets to the postmaster. Check
> > to make sure you have the right hostname and port number specified.
> > Another possibility is a packet-filtering issue (though those usually
> > result in no response, rather than a connection-refused response).
> >
> > regards, tom lane
> >
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